Peruse Muse Infuse

Home | Site Map | Site Index
Subscribe To This Blog
Atom Feed
RSS 2.0 Feed
Tags
Agile (9)  Architecture (25)  ASP.NET MVC (1)  Aspiring Architects (13)  Bio-Diversity (1)  Business (4)  Business Architecture (1)  Cheat Sheets (8)  CodePlex (4)  Dalek (1)  Data Architecture (1)  Enterprise Architecture (3)  Formula One (1)  Garfield (1)  Ghostbuster (1)  Hello Cruel World (1)  History (2)  iGovt (1)  Inter-Personal (1)  Modeling (5)  Morphfolia (1)  Off Topic (3)  open source (7)  podcast (3)  Political Architecture (1)  Politics (1)  Security (7)  Solution Architecture (1)  SqlAzure (1)  Strategy (4)  Tech-Ed 2009 (3)  The Cloud (4)  Thinking (6)  Web Development (7)  Wellington (12)  WSAF (12) 
Recent Posts
Base-Line of Usability NFRs
RoboMojo
Hitchhikers Guide to NFRs - the System Quality Attributes Map
Backlog Depression
At the Coal-Face - Solution Architecture in the Public Sector
Security Guidance - Practical Non-Functional Requirements
Career Direction - What and How
10 Years in IT - 6 Lessons Learnt
I Blame the Superficialites
Free Un-Evil Options Analysis Template
Available Blogs
Morphfolia Code Log
Peruse Muse Infuse
Backlog Depression
Posted at 29/07/2010 11:53:43 a.m. by AdrianK (42 days, 6 hours and 30 minutes ago)
Tagged under: Agile, Off Topic, Thinking

Backlog Depression

Anyone familiar with SCRUM will be familiar with the concept of a product backlog – a list of things that need to be done.  Having a list of things to do is hardly a novel idea; I’m guessing that most of us already do this in our head.

The particular thing about a Product Backlog is that the items on it are prioritized and scored for effort – and (at least in the context of SCRUM) there’s the implication that we’ll do some and then re-evaluate what to do next.

In my mind is a mental product backlog of all the new (and not so new) technologies, frameworks, products, etc that I want to look at / use / experiment with / get familiar with.

The big snag is that it’s not always easy to find time to do this – hence a feeling of depression.  For every one thing I learn more about there are three things I want to add to my list.  On top of this, priorities constantly change.

It’s at times like this I fully appreciate how clients must sometimes feel – when the projects not getting quite the traction they want and the business imperatives they’re trying to juggle keep racketing up the pressure.

 Some rights reserved.
Last Modified 15/04/2010 11:34:08 a.m. by AdrianK (adriank [at] morphological [dot] geek [dot] nz)